faebinding:

Remember that one day I was crying about my local indie bookstore not having Trail of Lightning? Well turns out it was in the adult fantasy section all along. I thought it was YA because of how it was talked about online–happens a lot more than I realized.

Anyways I’m stoked to read this, even tho I’ve been in the biggest reading slump of my life 😂

History, Queer Romance, and Fantasy Combine in the Work of KJ Charles

pitchercries:

for-the-flail:

For anyone curious about KJ Charles, this is a lovely introduction. Fairly spoilery reviews, but they really do cover a lot of what I like about the books.

omg logging in to tumblr after like 2 years and seeing your own article pop up on your dash o__________________o

History, Queer Romance, and Fantasy Combine in the Work of KJ Charles

ladyknightradiant:

WHERE GHOSTS WALK

When Threnody and Kailia are hired to reclaim a lost set of armor from legend, they expect it to be a fool’s errand.

It is. But not in the way they expected.

Used to only relying on each other, the pair must learn to trust the
rest of the hired band if they are to escape the Underworld. It’s a long
road of trials, but the group is determined to make it back to the
other side of the river Styx…and get revenge on the employer that left
them to die in some ancient elven ruins. But not all goes according to
plan, and escaping proves to be much harder than they’d imagined. After
all…souls aren’t meant to leave the Underworld.

Even if they don’t belong there.

(Where Ghosts Walk is the NPCs’ backstory for the D&D campaign I’m currently running, called Path of Ghosts–you might have heard me shouting about it.)

(aesthetic pictures) (NaNoWriMo 2k18) (PoG)

Can you name some (Fantasy, slow burn romance) books that you’d recommend to most people?

pandaflavouredcookies:

Hello!

I made a list of some of my favourite books with slow-burn romances here. If you’re specifically looking for fantasy+romance, then of those I especially recommend Uprooted and Strange the Dreamer!

A few other fantasy recommendations (that don’t necessarily have or focus on romance):

  • The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden. A beautiful story full of magic set in medieval Russia that is ridiculously enjoyable as a fantasy novel. The sequel has just been released — I’m roughly halfway through it and I can guarantee it’s just as good as the first instalment.
  • The Darkest Part of the Forest by Holly Black. I wrote a short review of this book here; it’s a dark fairy tale that subverts the usual tropes you expect from the genre.

Hope you find something that piques your interest amongst those!

honeyhardcandy:

thecaffeinebookwarrior:

the-prince-of-tides:

fluffmugger:

cryingalonewithfrankenstein:

nitrosplicer:

ghostloner:

scarlettaagni:

real-faker:

sanguinarysanguinity:

lauralandons:

txwatson:

lieutenantriza:

insanitysbloomings:

siderealsandman:

bravinto:

idlewildly:

eccentwrit:

asexualzoro:

cleverest-url:

rebel-against-reality:

w3rewolf-th3rewolf:

schrodingers-rufus:

fuchsiamae:

silverilly:

repulsion-gel:

fuchsiamae:

an incomplete list of unsettling short stories I read in textbooks

  • the scarlet ibis
  • marigolds
  • the diamond necklace
  • the monkey’s paw
  • the open boat
  • the lady and the tiger
  • the minister’s black veil
  • an occurrence at owl creek bridge
  • a rose for emily
  • (I found that one by googling “short story corpse in the house,” first result)
  • the cask of amontillado
  • the yellow wallpaper
  • the most dangerous game
  • a good man is hard to find

some are well-known, some obscure, some I enjoy as an adult, all made me uncomfortable between the ages of 11-15

add your own weird shit, I wanna be literary and disturbed

The Tell-Tale Heart, The Gift of the Magi, The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calavaras County, Thank You Ma’am

the box social by james reaney. i remember we all had to silently read it in class, and you would hear the moment everyone reached the Part because some people would audibly go “what”

wHat did I just put my eyes on

“The Veldt” by Ray Bradbury

Not quite a short story, but read in class: “The Monsters are Due on Maple Street” from The Twilight Zone

Harrison Bergeron, Cat and the Coffee Drinkers

“Where are you going and where have you been” by Joyce carol oates

“The Pedestrian” by Ray Bradbury

the lottery by shirley jackson

i can’t believe Roald Dahl’s “The Landlady” wasn’t already mentioned

and also it’s not so much unsettling as more absurdist but “The Leader” by Eugene Ionesco definitely made me go wtf

Ett halvt ark papper.
I cried so much.

Ночь у мазара, А. Шалимов

A Sound of Thunder by Ray Bradbury

I Have no Mouth, and I Must Scream by Harlan Ellison

The Lottery by Shirley Jackson

All Summer in a Day by Ray Bradbury 

Some of Us Had Been Threatening Our Friend Colby, by Donald Barthelme

I read Ray Bradbury’s “All Summer In A Day” in seventh grade (it wasn’t assigned, I was just going through my textbook for new stuff to read) and as a bullied kid with SAD, it Fucked Me Up.

An Ordinary Day with Peanuts, by Shirley Jackson

Eh, this was more like community college, but The Star by Arthur C. Clarke

Lamb to the Slaughter by Roald Dahl

and this story that I can’t remember the name of and can’t find, though it might be by O. Henry? it’s about a bunch of demons who want to stop Santa Claus from going through with Christmas, and he must travel through the mountains they inhabit to escape their vices? (good christ I can’t remember the name for the life of me)

Ok but the laughing man and a good day for bananafish but j.d. Salinger

The City (195) Ray Bradbury. An intense commentary on colonialism and space exploration. I read it for a sci fi survey class.

Another short story I read in that sci fi class was Vaster than Empires and More Slow (1971) by Ursula K. Le Guin. A commentary on humanity and how human we believe ourselves to be. Also, an interesting commentary on mental health.

In the Woods Beneath the Cherry Blossoms in Full Bloom, written in 1947 by Ango Sakaguchi. It made my skin crawl the first time I read it.

Also going to recommend For A Breath I Tarry by Roger Zelazny, a commentary on whether AI can become human in a future without humans: http://www.kulichki.com/moshkow/ZELQZNY/forbreat.txt

whoever posted “The Laughing Man” and “A Good Day For Bananafish” is Correct

All of Flannery O’Connor’s shorts.

I didn’t read it in a text book, but “I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream” haunted me for life.

i scrolled straight to the bottom of this post to reblog it and save it for later, but i cannot BELIEVE with so many replies, “I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream” is the bottom-most addition

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

jonajacknife:

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

writeroffates:

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

aristoteliancomplacency:

Hell I just witnessed a murder

Ron: (Standing beside a coffin) we are here today to lay to rest this Long Dead Academic

(Muffled screaming from inside the coffin)

Mourner: I think this man is still alive

Ron: THAT’S JUST AIR ESCAPING

This is actually really cool and I just read the interview she did for the New York Times. I think anyone interested could give good a read: https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/11/02/magazine/the-first-woman-to-translate-the-odyssey-into-english.html

I will be very interested in reading the translation she did of it! ❤

Same! An untainted version perhaps

INDEED

buchergenuss32:

ampersandworm:

bogleech:

kajedheat:

bogleech:

Another weird and frustrating phenomenon when you get sucked into an argument with conservative types (something I usually try to avoid bothering with anymore) is that there’s this very narrow set of people they’re convinced are key figures, even “leaders” on any given topic. Talk about climate change and they bring up Al Gore. Talk about women’s rights and they bring up Anita Sarkeesian.

To this day I have NO IDEA what any of those people have ever said on those topics, and in most cases, I never even heard of them outside of conservative complaints and memes. I would never know the name Anita Sarkeesian if she wasn’t one random blogger out of thousands that an obscure niche of people went positively ballistic over. I’ve never heard of anyone accepting the existence of global warming just because non-scientist Al Gore said to.

If I tell them this they never believe it. They’re completely convinced that the beliefs they hate actually revolve around some random youtubers or B-list politicians they randomly elevated into their own bugbears and the idea that the people they fight hardest against actually have barely any influence or fame outside their own subculture seems almost impossible for them to accept.

George Soros.

I always see people saying George Soros pays people like me to protest (I wish), or buses people to vote on battleground states, some way or another he has us under our thrall.

I don’t even know who the fuck George Soros IS

I don’t even feel bothered to Google him and find out- he’s utterly irrelevant to my life. But apparently all liberals are on his payroll somehow.

I, too, never heard of George Soros before just recently.

They could make up absolutely any name in these arguments and it would have just as much meaning to me. “You’re only pro-vaccine because you’re shilling for Jiminy Ferpendoodle!!!”

I’ve heard this referred to as the central fallacy of the authoritarian mindset: It’s not that authoritarians don’t care about facts, it’s that facts aren’t real until they are confirmed by an Authority. Of course no liberal believed in Global Warming until Al Gore said so! Why would they believe it, until Someone In Charge said it? And moreover, if you can prove That Person Isn’t Really An Authority, the facts will change! See also:

  • Why Creationists are obsessed with disproving Darwin – not his theory, but the man himself. As if casting doubt on Darwin-a-dude-born-in-eighteen-fucking-oh-nine-for-chrissake-’s personal beliefs will somehow completely disprove the ensuing two centuries of scientific research.
  • Why various idiot politicians try to legislate away Global Climate Change, as if making laws against the ocean will stop it from rising. 

I’m sure you could add on ten thousand bullet points but it’s Saturday and I don’t wanna do the research when I could be cleaning my kitchen and playing Minecraft. 

This is actually supported by psychological and sociological research into authoritarianism; on @ampersandworm​‘s comment on doing the research, I have to recommend Bob Altemeyer’s excellent (and free!) book, The Authoritarians, where he summarizes his research into the authoritarian mindset in a layman accessible manner (and, yes, I do love the irony that, in response to a comment about how conservatives only believe something when supported by An Authority, I’m linking to An Authority for discussion on that mindset).  It is really worth a read to gain some insight into the mindset of American authoritarians.  

For a more succinct summary, however, have a comment from Prof. Altemeyer on Trump and Authoritarian followers (bolding from me):


We know a lot about authoritarian followers, but unfortunately most of what we know indicates it will be almost impossible to change their minds, especially in a few months. Here are a dozen things established by research.

  1. They are highly ethnocentric, highly inclined to see the world as their in-group versus everyone else. Because they are so committed to their in-group, they are very zealous in its cause.
  2. They are highly fearful of a dangerous world. Their parents taught them, more than parents usually do, that the world is dangerous. They may also be genetically predisposed to experiencing stronger fear than most people do.
  3. They are highly self-righteous. They believe they are the “good people” and this unlocks a lot of hostile impulses against those they consider bad.
  4. They are aggressive. Given the chance to attack someone with the approval of an authority, they will lower the boom.
  5. They are highly prejudiced against racial and ethnic majorities, non-heterosexuals, and women in general.
  6. Their beliefs are a mass of contradictions. They have highly compartmentalized minds, in which opposite beliefs exist side-by-side in adjacent boxes. As a result, their thinking is full of double-standards.
  7. They reason poorly. If they like the conclusion of an argument, they don’t pay much attention to whether the evidence is valid or the argument is consistent.
  8. They are highly dogmatic. Because they have gotten their beliefs mainly from the authorities in their lives, rather than think things out for themselves, they have no real defense when facts or events indicate they are wrong. So they just dig in their heels and refuse to change.
  9. They are very dependent on social reinforcement of their beliefs. They think they are right because almost everyone they know, almost every news broadcast they see, almost every radio commentator they listen to, tells them they are. That is, they screen out the sources that will suggest that they are wrong.
  10. Because they severely limit their exposure to different people and ideas, they vastly overestimate the extent to which other people agree with them. And thinking they are “the moral majority” supports their attacks on the “evil minorities” they see in the country.
  11. They are easily duped by manipulators who pretend to espouse their causes when all the con-artists really want is personal gain.
  12. They are largely blind to themselves. They have little self-understanding and insight into why they think and do what they do.

Points number 6, 7, 8 and 9 are what lead to the “argument from authority” tendency that OP noted.  

splickedylit:

jumpingjacktrash:

roachpatrol:

roachpatrol:

i want to talk about the novel im writing with @rollerskatinglizard literally all the time because i’m so excited about how well it’s going but i’m terrified to jinx it

ok here’s the (kind of lengthy) blurb: 

In a portal fantasy where the four seasons of a magical world are ruled by young men and women abducted from mundane realms, bitter highschool reject Caleb Miller finds himself abruptly appointed the King of Summer. He’s this world’s latest hope to finally end the King of Winter’s brutal reign… but it isn’t until Winter’s Champion, Milo Caldwell, flees to Caleb’s court, shattered in mind and body and begging for help in saving the Northern Capital from its own king, that Caleb finally sees a way to bring an end to Winter’s endless war. 

There’s just one final complication. Milo Caldwell was once a kid from Caleb’s own world: his own highschool, even. Formerly a friendly, popular jock, now the knight is a (literally) pale shadow of himself, bereft of his memories of any other place or purpose than his service to Winter’s cruel, domineering sovereign. In unraveling the mystery of Milo’s destruction, Caleb could bring a final balance to the world— but Milo isn’t at all sure he wants to know what Caleb might discover.

you have awakened in me a slavering hunger. MUST READ THIS

THAT’S A REASONABLE RESPONSE IT’S VERY GOOD